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“My
song is about the victims and what they felt, and what
you felt watching it,” he said. “My song
is about the emotions about what happened as a black
person and as any person.”
Lee’s
song, performed by singer Allen Watty, speaks about
frustration over lack of aid and the delayed response
by federal officials to the storm. Its lyrics include
lines like, “Then it hit me, ain’t nobody
coming to get me, nobody feels my pain, once again the
color of my skin reminds me things ain’t changed!”
“It
was very painful and personal,” said Lee, who’s
based in Fairfax, Va. “It really said a lot when
people didn’t show up. It was one thing after
another.”
Lee’s
song follows another song that’s become widely
circulated on the Internet: “George Bush Doesn’t
Care About Black People.” The song is performed
by the Houston-based rap duo The Legendary K.O. (Damien
Randle and Micah Nickerson) and partly inspired by rapper
Kanye West’s now-famous blast of the president
during a nationally televised Katrina telethon. It samples
West’s “Gold Digger” (which itself
sample’s Ray Charles’ “I’ve
Got A Woman”).
While
Randle said the pair was surprised by the song’s
popularity — they only sent it off to a few friends
before bloggers helped circulate it — he said
the song has been so popular because it has helped express
the feelings many in the country have.
“There
are a lot of people not only in this country and in
this world that actually feel that way. It touched a
nerve for a lot of people,” he said. “You
haven’t really seen anyone call the president’s
actions into question like that, using a very popular
form, like music.”
Lee
says his song is not a slam against Bush, although he
does feel race played a factor in the delay of aid.
“I
think (the song) has some political elements, because
the government didn’t respond. It’s political
for sure because George Bush came forward himself and
said there was a mistake,” he said.
Lee
says he has gotten requests from radio stations who
want to air the song, and is in talks to get the song
released commercially.
“My
goal was to reach the world with this song,” he
said. “Right now, we’re trying to expose
the song as much as possible.”
Interested
ones can listen to the song by visiting:
www.hurricanesong.com
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